Pemex to shut newly drilled oilfields after price crash -President

Mexico City — Mexico’s highly indebted state company Pemex will halt crude production at newly drilled oilfields and refine more to face a rapid decline in global demand that has sent oil prices into negative numbers, the country’s president said on Tuesday.

It was not immediately clear how much production would be removed by the closure of new fields and whether it would exceed a 100,000 barrels-per-day (bpd) quota already agreed with the OPEC+ group of producing countries.

Pemex last year announced a plan to reopen and develop about 20 oilfields that could produce around 50,000 bpd of crude. Production so far achieved in those areas is only about 5,000 bpd, according to market sources.

Mature fields would be harder to close down because Pemex artificially creates pressure below ground to extract crude from many of them, while oil flows naturally from the newer fields.

“Why does the fall in prices not affect us so much? Because we invested last year in well drilling in new oilfields,” President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said during his regular morning news conference.

“Those new wells, now that oil is worthless, we can shut their valves and they don’t lose pressure.”

The price of U.S. West Texas Intermediate and Mexico’s flagship Maya crude closed on Monday in negative figures for the first time ever, reflecting lack of space for storing oil around the world as demand keeps falling.

Lopez Obrador said his strategy of boosting national refining was already paying dividends and that almost half of the country’s crude output was now being processed domestically.

He said Pemex is sending about 800,000 bpd of a 1.7 million-bpd production to domestic refineries, which would be able to process 1 million bpd next month.

“In May, we will be processing 1 million barrels per day,” Lopez Obrador said. “We will be able to produce more gasoline in Mexico and stop purchases of foreign gasoline. That will help us overcome the crisis produced by the price fall.”

Pemex, which has more than $105 billion in financial debt, has been hit hard by the global oil price collapse, even though is among a reduced group of oil producers protected by hedging programs. Pemex’s hedge is this year covering about a quarter of its exports.

The company’s debt has been downgraded to junk status by two ratings agencies, and analysts expect the government will have to offer further financial support to keep the state firm afloat.

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